Do your students struggle with avoir and être? Do you constantly hear things like, "Madame, je suis fini!" or "Pendant le week-end, j'ai allé au cinéma"? I've taught in three schools with three entirely different groups of students, and these mistakes happened everywhere. I've talked to French as a second language and French immersion teachers from all over, and they all report having issues with these two verbs.
So, what do we do?
1. Correct students each time.
2. Incorporate speaking into your class.
I love Find Someone Who activities because they are quick and easy to use. They will provide reinforcement for the already great lessons you have planned. Best of all, my Find Someone Who resources include printable questions that you can assign as follow up homework or use as a speaking quiz. You'll also get French and English speaking rubrics!
3. Have fun with writing.
Click here to check out this avoir ou être resource.
4. Incorporate technology into your classroom.
Have you checked out Boom Learning yet? These digital task cards are fun, easy-to-use, and they are self-checking. If you have students who need extra practice or students who are always finished first, all you need is a computer, a smartphone, or a tablet with a modern browser, and students can practice their grammar concepts on their own!
Click here to get this FREE fun digital task card set from my Boom Learning store.
5. Play with dice.
We use dice in my classroom all the time. I love to play games and have fun in class, and when the kids are having fun, they don't even realize that they are learning! Plus, they are speaking French, which is super-important!
Here is a quick and easy game you can do with sets of colored dice. You'll need approximately 10 dice in two different colors. I use white and blue because that's what I found on sale at the toy store, but any two colors will work.
You simply write two columns on your board, and in the first column, you'll number from 1-6, then put a subject pronoun next to each number. In the second column, you'll put an adjective, an age, or something that would finish an avoir or être expression.
If practicing the passé composé, you'd put a mix of verbs conjugated with avoir and être.
Here's what it should look like:
Blue die White die
1. je 1. 14 ans
2. tu 2. faim
3. il/elle/on 3. intelligent
4. nous 4. besoin d'un crayon
5. vous 5. grand
6. ils/elles 6. jeune
Give each group one die of each color. Students roll both dice and conjugate the correct verb needed to complete the sentence. They can answer orally (my preferred method) or you can have them write on a sheet of paper. Students take turns for the desired amount of time, and when you think they have had enough practice, you can call on a few students to make complete sentences.
These kinds of drills bring an element of fun into your classes, get students speaking, and best of all, they require very little prep on your part!
I hope these have been some handy tips. What do you think? Are avoir and être more difficult than other verbs?
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